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Katatonia’s Jonas Renkse Reflects on Anders Nyström’s Legacy

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Katatonia has always been a band defined by transformation. From their early ’90s death-doom origins to their later forays into melancholic progressive rock, their sound evolved — but the partnership at the heart of that evolution stayed the same: Jonas Renkse and Anders Nyström.

Now, for the first time since Nyström’s departure earlier this year, Renkse is speaking candidly about the creative chemistry that defined Katatonia for more than three decades. In a new interview with Sinusoidal Music, Renkse gave a heartfelt look back at Nyström’s importance to the band’s legacy.

“He’s been a super important person for many years in the band. I mean, we started the band together. He was the main songwriter in the beginning. And obviously, his presence and the songs that he made, you know, made the whole foundation of the band. Yeah, I mean, super important person.”

Renkse described their musical relationship as both collaborative and intuitive, particularly in the band’s formative years.

“I mean, we’ve always worked on the music sort of together. Even when he was writing more of the music, we would sit down and go through everything and say—because we had the same kind of inspirations—we had like a musical language that was very intricate with how we wanted things to sound. And we seldomly had a fight about it.”

Though Renkse eventually grew into a dominant creative force within the band, he credited Nyström’s guitar work and songwriting with shaping their early output.

“So, I think it’s been a joint effort. But he was obviously more… he was a talented guitar player. I couldn’t really play guitar in the beginning. So I had to tell him what to play and how to play it, you know. So yeah, definitely very important in that sense.”

Albums like Brave Murder Day, The Great Cold Distance, and Night Is the New Day wouldn’t exist in their current form without that core partnership. Katatonia’s sound — brooding, layered, and emotionally devastating — owes much to the bond between Renkse and Nyström.

The split between the two founding members earlier this year was marked by a noticeable tension. While Renkse described the decision as mutual and forward-thinking, saying it was “the best option for everyone to thrive and move forward with their own creative preferences as well as personal schedules,” Nyström offered a more pointed response.

“Katatonia could and should have been mutually laid to rest while exploiting the freedom to continue in any desirable direction under a new name. But with Jonas now regrouping with new members and navigating further in his own direction, I no longer need to wait and see which way the wind is blowing to enter that void and grab hold of what’s been abandoned.”

Regardless of where both artists go from here, Katatonia’s legacy — and its most iconic records — will always carry the imprint of what Renkse and Nyström built together.

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